Reputation: 301
OK, so I've run into an issue with nested php includes, and I want to know what is a good compromise of best practices and ease-of-use.
Here's my website structure:
root
- index.php
-/include
- header.php
- footer.php
-/articles
-article-1.php
-/css
-style.css
So here's the issue: Inside index.php I have an include "include/header.php"
. Inside header.php I have many relative paths such as <link href="css/style.css>
. And inside article-1.php I also have include "include/header.php"
.
So the index file works. But the article-1 file can't see the css file because the relative link is now looking for /articles/css/style.css. I found out about the <base>
tag, and have set that in header.php, and it's fixed all my problems except for anchor links (which I can work around with javascript if I HAVE to), but I'm still concerned about what best practice is. How should I go about doing this correctly without having to prepend every single relative link with a huge php line and also without having to use a javascript hack to make anchor links work?
Thanks!
Upvotes: 0
Views: 505
Reputation: 301
I ended up using a <base>
tag in the header, and then wherever I needed anchor links I used php like so: <a href="http://<?php echo $_SERVER[HTTP_HOST] . $_SERVER[REQUEST_URI];?>#">
This makes the link go to the current page with a # added to the end, so it's the same as using <a href="#">
Let me know if you think I could have done this a better way! Thanks!
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1
In my opinion the best practice for this sitution is to go back to the root directory, provided that your project is in the root of your server/webspace.
Use a "/" in the beginning of the links, which is an absolute path.
Example: /css/style.css IS ACTUALLY root->css folder->style.css file
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 660
I think you can go up a directory with "../", current directory is "./"
So from root/articles/article-1.php, you would get to your stylesheet with ../css/style.css
<link href="../css/style.css">
Upvotes: 0